Everyone knows the internet is full of cool pics, but finding them entails going to random sites and tracking them down. Friends, if you're in the market for cool pics, look no further. You're in good hands here.
Everyone knows the internet is full of cool pics, but finding them entails going to random sites and tracking them down. Friends, if you're in the market for cool pics, look no further. You're in good hands here.
This soccer stadium in Monterrey, Mexico offers breathtaking views of the nearby mountains. Those mountains, meanwhile, offer a free ticket to the game for anyone willing to make the hike.
This landscape photo is undoctored apart from minor touch-ups, but it looks totally surreal. It's incredible how winter weather can make the landscape so minimalistic.
You're looking at garbage collectors in Turkey who've opened a library for discarded books. I don't know why they chose to locate it in the Batcave, but it's a pretty cool look.
Elephants are highly intelligent and social animals, and even the best zoo can't offer a ton of space for them to roam around. At this zoo, they're allowed to roam the grounds after hours.
This photo of the "frogmen" of the Danish Special Forces looks like something straight out of a nightmare. Depending on who you are, this could be a very welcome or a very unwelcome sight.
It takes a sec to get your head around this mindbending photograph. What looks like a grim cityscape is actually a frozen pier, just flipped upside down.
Unlikely animal pairings are pretty great to see. This wolf and bear were observed hanging out and hunting together for over a week.
A photographer with nerves of steel captured this photo of the May 18, 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens. The eruption has left the landscape scarred to this day.
This pic was snapped off the coast of Nova Scotia, Canada. The waves alone give me seasickness, while the perfectly-timed orcas breaching makes this photo special indeed.
This phenomenon occurs when fruit on a tree gets coated by freezing rain. Once the fruit rots, it eventually falls out, leaving a perfect icy outline.
This guy's a quadriplegic, but thanks to this incredible exoskeleton, he's able to move again. While he generally needs a walker in front of him, he's able to walk hundreds of steps.
This photo from the icy waters near Svalbard, Norway shows a massive fin whale spine that's been preserved by the cold temperatures.
This breathtaking photo shows a marshy forest, with a stunning rainbow sheen to the surface of the water. I hope it's a fun natural effect and not, like, an oil spill.
During the last Ice Age, the Great Lakes weren't so great. Humans lived in the area at the time, and traversed areas that are now covered by water. This archaeological site, featuring stones in a circle and a picture of a mastadon, can be found under Lake Michigan.
This photo of a puddle shows a unique perspective of the buildings and sky above. Meanwhile, when I try to take a pic like this I just get a reflection of my confused face.
This stack of old-timey coins was in a soldier's breast pocket during the First World War. As you can see, they truly were a lifesaver.
That's because this just happened to be the light pattern that resulted when the sun peeked through the cracks in the uploader's bathroom window.
At this point, I feel like I'm mentally prepared for when I inevitably walk into an art gallery and see my exact double staring back at me from hundreds of years ago.
And that flatness isn't an illusion either. Being run over a whole bunch of times will do that to something.
Although those faces usually mimic some kind of human expression, we can see that this tree is playing it a little differently and showing us an oddly accurate depiction of a pig face.
This is called Burlwood and it shows up on a tree when it's experiencing a prolonged period of stress. This can either be from blunt trauma, a fungus, or a virus.
If it seems like this bike image has a number five in it, that's not by accident. This light doesn't just represent a bike, but also the city's area code of 050.
Because while that tip indicates a much more expansive iceberg below it, these rails serve as the last trace of the entrance to what was probably a fairly deep mine before it caved in.
It's just that the mix of the bright lights on the balcony we see in the foreground and the reflective guardrails on each balcony make it seem as though all of them have lights.
That's because it's covering the switch of a garbage disposal, which is absolutely something that we never want to turn on by accident.
And so we have this model, which was the most sophisticated graphic that the computers at Taylor University could produce in the early 1970s.
This was actually a bullet used during World War I, but somebody had the idea to convert it into a lighter in the century since that conflict ended.
But while hundreds of artists have recreated the beast in the years since H.P. Lovecraft's original stories, you'd be hard pressed to find one as detailed as this sculpture.
And I think it's all the more disturbing for it.
This girl was climbing a sheer cliff, which is pretty impressive. Unfortunately, she lost her glasses. Fortunately (for us), her climbing partner captured this moment on camera.
Archaeologists found this Corinthian helmet from the Battle of Marathon. It turns out the warrior's skull was still inside the helmet.
A candid photo of the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel is undeniably pretty to look at. It's also against the rules to take these pics, making them pretty unique.
This tattoo shows a fun Cheshire Cat smile under regular light. But when it's exposed to ultraviolet light, the rest of the art reveals itself as well.